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| #158970 - 12/18/08 08:08 PM  Re: Wool vs. Fleece blanket-is wool worth the extra $?
[Re: paramedicpete] |  
|   Carpal Tunnel
 
   Registered:  11/09/06
 Posts: 2851
 Loc:  La-USA
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Pete,
 First - I don't really like wearing hats, but I recognize the necessity of having a hat to wear both at work or because of the weather.
 
 The only hats that I carry around are:
 
 Ball caps or hats with attached (chin) strap that I can hang onto a Lanyard Clip that is on my belt.
 
 Touques or Berets that I can tuck under my belt or roll up and put under the epaulets that are on a shirt or jacket.
 
 That's the closest I have come to a solution that will keep me from losing hats.
 
_________________________QMC, USCG (Ret)
 The best luck is what you make yourself!
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| #159001 - 12/18/08 10:19 PM  Re: Wool vs. Fleece blanket-is wool worth the extr
[Re: paramedicpete] |  
|   Member
 
 Registered:  03/27/08
 Posts: 191
 Loc:  NYC
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Alligator clips, like our mothers used to fasten our mittens to us?   |  
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| #159002 - 12/18/08 10:25 PM  Re: Wool vs. Fleece blanket-is wool worth the extr
[Re: paramedicpete] |  
|   Veteran
 
   Registered:  11/01/08
 Posts: 1530
 Loc:  DFW, Texas
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Yep, time for the idiot mittens.  I used to use them so I could just let them hang around my neck when in the lodge between ski runs. 
_________________________I do the things that I must, and really regret, are unfortunately necessary.
 
 RIP OBG
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| #159123 - 12/19/08 03:06 PM  Re: Wool vs. Fleece blanket-is wool worth the extra $?
[Re: wildman800] |  
|   Pooh-Bah
 
   Registered:  04/09/02
 Posts: 1920
 Loc:  Frederick, Maryland
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When I am wearing a jacket, I usually roll up the hat and put it in the sleeve figuring, I would have to remember I had a hat when I put my arm in the sleeve and encountered the hat   .  However, I have been known to put on my jacket, miss the hat and sometime latter say to myself “I know I had a hat, what did I do with it?”   . Pete |  
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| #159161 - 12/19/08 06:38 PM  Re: Wool vs. Fleece blanket-is wool worth the extra $?
[Re: benjammin] |  
|   Carpal Tunnel
 
   Registered:  08/03/07
 Posts: 3078
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Not quite the same sort of fleece material setup, but very interesting. I may buy a swatch and see what it actually looks like.Perhaps 'Polartec Powershield with high loft', soft shell fabric would make a better blanket material than the Gore Windstopper. The Poweshield fabric seems to be regarded as being more comfortable and durable with a high insulation factor than the Gore Windstopper fabric. A 2 metre by 1.5 metre blanket made from 'Powershield High Loft' would weigh around 1kg  The Power shield high loft concept belongs to the very latest of Soft  Shells (Millet call Action Shells) .It is based on a 2 layer system comprising of a fleece insulant and a breathable ,water resistant outer layer which offers optimal protection in the event of adverse weather ,while also guaranteeing breathabilty ,abrasion resistant and stretch properties. All factors that afford enhanced freedom of movement.Powershield High Loft features two main characteristics its 100% Polamide stretch outer layer, which is highly abrasion resistant and its high loft inner layer with an exceptional weight warmth ratio 22% polyamide, 78% polyester, 310g/m2 DWR treated.The Artillery blanket fleece material seems very interesting as I have not come across a true waterproof fleece which is as waterproof to the same extent as say Goretex. The Polartec Powershield Fabric appears to be available in Canada,http://www.justmakeit.com/fabrics/fleece/index.html |  
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| #159165 - 12/19/08 06:56 PM  Re: Wool vs. Fleece blanket-is wool worth the extra $?
[Re: Am_Fear_Liath_Mor] |  
|   Rapscallion
 Carpal Tunnel
 
   Registered:  02/06/04
 Posts: 4020
 Loc:  Anchorage AK
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All these new textiles have me discussing with my seamstress, er, spouse about some new ideas.  Trouble there...
 Yes, I will positively confirm that my artillery blanket will not allow water to soak through the fabric so long as I put no holes in it.  The lamination is a 100% water barrier.  You have to physically damage it to make it leak, and since the weave is naturally hydrophillic, moisture deposited on the surface tends to stay at the surface, unless it is hydraulically forced into the weave, and even then it will want to migrate back to the surface once the pressure is removed.
 
 
 
_________________________The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools.
 -- Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)
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| #159267 - 12/20/08 05:48 AM  Re: Wool vs. Fleece blanket-is wool worth the extra $?
[Re: el_diabl0] |  
|   Veteran
 
   Registered:  07/23/08
 Posts: 1502
 Loc:  Mesa, AZ
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Benjammin, I went to the website to look at the artillery blanket. At roughly 6 1/2 feet x 4 3/4 feet, how heavy is it? Not looking for something UL, but does it weigh 2 pounds or 4 pounds? 
 Maybe you could stand on a scale with and without it or you might even have a fish scale or food scale you could use.
 
 Thanks for taking the time to investigate this. At $80, if it does what you say it does, it would be worth 2x the cost of a 'improved' woobie.
 
_________________________Don't just survive. Thrive.
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| #159275 - 12/20/08 12:59 PM  Re: Wool vs. Fleece blanket-is wool worth the extra $?
[Re: comms] |  
|   Pooh-Bah
 
   Registered:  03/08/07
 Posts: 2208
 Loc:  Beer&Cheese country
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Benjamin is doing a GREAT job answering questions - you sure you're not a spokesman?   I almost pulled the trigger on a discounted blanket, but the 48x60 size stopped me - too small to wrap around myself comfortably.  I'll be interested if the others of you that are buying second Benjamin's observations.  I might have to get an Arty blanket then. Thanks for answering so quickly. |  
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| #159286 - 12/20/08 03:11 PM  Re: Wool vs. Fleece blanket-is wool worth the extr
[Re: MDinana] |  
|   Veteran
 
   Registered:  11/01/08
 Posts: 1530
 Loc:  DFW, Texas
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Benjamin is doing a GREAT job answering questions - you sure you're not a spokesman?   I almost pulled the trigger on a discounted blanket, but the 48x60 size stopped me - too small to wrap around myself comfortably.  I'll be interested if the others of you that are buying second Benjamin's observations.  I might have to get an Arty blanket then. Thanks for answering so quickly. To kinda second Benjamin, If this is the same fleece / laminate combo that I talked about in the "quiet clothes, tents and tarps" thread it is amazing.  If rain won't penetrate my light jacket while riding at highway speed on my motorcycle, it isn't going thru during a night sleeping in the rain.
 Edited by Desperado (12/20/08 03:12 PM)
 
_________________________I do the things that I must, and really regret, are unfortunately necessary.
 
 RIP OBG
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| #159302 - 12/20/08 05:53 PM  Re: Wool vs. Fleece blanket-is wool worth the extra $?
[Re: ducktapeguy] |  
|   Veteran
 
 Registered:  10/14/08
 Posts: 1517
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If I were going to a wet environment I would carry fleece.  If it were dry, and I didn't mind the weight, wool.  Wool is much more durable and versatile, just heavier and it takes longer to dry; however it will still keep you warm when wet.
 Are you more worried about weight or durability?
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